Sales and Crabb look back on 2018. Recorded live at the ANU on Sun 9 December.
Read MoreCrabb and Sales are in sync. They have both been consuming works about horror and the art of writing.
Read MoreJust a few kilometres from the hallowed MCG, and in front of a live audience of 2400 people, Crabb and Sales recreate Shane Warne taking his 700th wicket. And they've seen every version of A Star Is Born. Recorded live in Melbourne.
Read MoreBumbling Brenda stumbled across a podcast that Crabb and Sales recorded and sent to her ages ago! The Warne interview may have come and gone but it is never too late to hear Sales and Crabb discussing fielding positions, sledging tactics and soaking fruit in booze.
Read MoreCrabb and Sales have been doing some serious reading about people on the margins. Sales still manages to drop a major clang but mercifully doesn’t join the ranks of Michael Caine impersonators.
Read MoreCrabb revels in her opportunity to drop the phrases “pantry items” and “innovative indexes” while discussing her new cook book. You can hear Crabb’s eyes rolling when Sales claims she could improve on the recipes by adding in “a few extra ingredients” and removing all the capers.
Read MoreBoth Crabb and Sales are getting all judgy from their moral high grounds. Lots of art forms are discussed as well as the new Chat 10 Looks 3 Bookshop.
Read MoreRecorded live at the Heath Ledger Theatre in Perth on September 15th.
Read MoreSales has written a book and Crabb has read it. Discussion ensues.
Read MoreCrabb is stunned to discover that Sales is reading and enjoying a book of poetry. Could capers and tuna be on the menu next?
Read MoreSince Sales and Crabb last met the country has a new Prime Minister. Politics these days seems like a workplace with the conflict buttons dialed up to eleven.
Read MoreSales notes that Crabb seems to know an awful lot about Cocktail, a film she claims to hate so much. Crabb admits that she retains reprehensible details of worthless projects. [Cue: Kokomo sing along] Tom Cruise, Steve Jobs and Brian Mannix all get mentions, which leads to the question: Why do we accept that geniuses and celebrities should be able to act like monsters!?
Read More